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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Stockholm (AFP) April 14, 2022
Swedish telecoms equipment giant Ericsson said Thursday it will likely have to pay new fines to the US Department of Justice over suspected bribes to the Islamic State group in Iraq. Chief executive Borje Ekholm conceded in a newspaper interview in February that some of Ericsson employees may have bribed IS members for road transport through areas controlled by the group in Iraq. The admission was made before the publication of a report by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) revealing that an internal Ericsson investigation from 2019 was never made public. The internal probe had identified possible corruption between 2011 and 2019 in the group's Iraqi operations. In the company's quarterly earnings statement on Thursday, Ekholm said Ericsson was "fully committed to cooperating" with the US Department of Justice. "The resolution of these matters could result in a range of actions by DOJ, and may likely include additional monetary payments, the magnitude of which cannot at this time be reliably estimated," he said. Following the announcement, shares in the telecom giant tumbled over six percent in the early hours of trading on the Stockholm stock exchange. The Swedish firm's shares have lost almost a quarter of their value since mid-February. Ericsson already agreed to pay $1 billion in penalties to US authorities to close corruption cases in Djibouti, China, Vietnam, Indonesia and Kuwait in 2019. Ekholm said in Thursday's statement that the company was "limited in what we can say" about the events in Iraq, but he said in March that it was "a very serious matter, and involves embarrassing and unacceptable conduct in the past". At the Ericsson's annual meeting in late March, shareholders voted against discharging Ekholm and the board from liabilities, a normally routine decision. Both Ekholm and board members were nonetheless re-elected to their positions. In its earnings statement, Ericsson reported that net profit fell eight percent to 2.9 billion Swedish kronor (280 million euros, $307 million). The company had announced on Monday that it would set aside provisions of 900 million kronor to cover the financial hit from its suspension of activities in Russia following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. Ericsson's first-quarter sales beat expectations but its operating profit of 4.7 billion kronor was below an estimate by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News. map/jll/lth
![]() ![]() Iraq official warns of jihadist threat from Syria camp Baghdad (AFP) April 9, 2022 The Al-Hol camp for displaced people in Syria is a jihadist threat and should be dismantled, a senior Iraqi security official said on Saturday. Al-Hol, in the Kurdish-controlled northeast, is Syria's largest camp for displaced people. It houses about 56,000 including displaced Syrians and Iraqi refugees, some of whom maintain links with the Islamic State group (IS). About 10,000 are foreigners, including relatives of jihadists. "Each day that passes with the camp still there, hate grows and ... read more
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